Stimulus Hopes Keep Lifting Japan Stocks
19 July 2016 - 1:50PM
Dow Jones News
Stocks in Japan rose for their sixth straight session Tuesday
amid continued expectations that the Bank of Japan will soon roll
out stimulus for the economy.
The Nikkei Stock Average traded up 0.5%, as trading resumed
following a holiday the previous day. The benchmark gained 9.2%
last week.
But elsewhere in Asia, shares mostly weakened with Chinese
stocks in Hong Kong down 1%. The Hang Seng Index fell 0.8%, and
South Korea's Kospi and Shanghai Composite Index were both down
0.5%. Australia's S&P ASX 200 slipped 0.1%.
In Japan, "we see locals buying the dollars and selling the
yen," said Tareck Horchani, a senior sales trader at Saxo Capital
Markets in Singapore, adding that the trend had likely accelerated
in the run-up to yesterday's news that SoftBank Group Corp. was
making a $32 billion bid for U.K.-based chip-designed ARM Holdings
PLC using sterling.
Shares of SoftBank plunged nearly 11% on Tuesday in reaction to
the news, but the forex market is supporting the overall Japanese
market, as the banks funding the deal put pressure on the yen,
explained Mr. Horchani.
A weaker Japanese yen helps the competitiveness of Japanese
exporters that pay costs at home.
Market sentiment in Asia was turning a bit more cautious with
central bank meetings this week, including the European Central
Bank's on Thursday.
Earlier Tuesday, Australia's central bank left the door open to
a further cut in interest rates next month.
In South Korea, shares were off after news that North Korea test
fired three missiles as well as data that the country's producer
price index deflation narrowed to 2.7% in June from 3.1% in
May.
Kenan Machado contributed to this article.
Write to Chao Deng at Chao.Deng@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
July 18, 2016 23:35 ET (03:35 GMT)
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